Now, Wikileaks suffering its own ‘financial’ leaks
December 13th, 2010 - 1:20 pm ICT by ANILondon, Dec.13 (ANI): Whistle blowing web site Wikileaks is now facing questions over its finances, as lawyers for its alleged main source, Private Bradley Manning, said they had not seen a penny of tens of thousands of dollars raised by the site to help pay for his defence and promised to them three months ago. According to The Telegraph, the latest development comes after a senior WikiLeaks activist said that she and others had resigned from the organization because of their deep concern about its treatment of sources and “lack of transparency with relation to large sums of money”.
This newspaper has learned that one of WikiLeaks’s main funding channels, the Germany-based Wau Holland Foundation, has been issued with two official warnings by charity regulators after failing to file financial records.
It has also emerged that the online payment service PayPal, which last week cut off donations to WikiLeaks, suspended the site’s account twice before, once under money laundering regulations.
WikiLeaks, which says its operating costs are about 200,000 dollars annually, claims to have raised more than a million dollars in donations in the first eight months of this year alone, before most of its highest- profile leaks were published.
Since then, according to one person connected with the group, further “serious amounts of money” have come in, mostly in small sums through the WikiLeaks website.
However, in its four-year existence, the group and its associated organizations have never produced any accounts.
WikiLeaks promised to publish accounts in August, but did not do so. It now says it will provide them by the end of the year.
Much of Wikileaks’s money goes through the Wau Holland Foundation, named after a former computer hacker and based in Kassel, Germany.
WikiLeaks was unavailable for comment. But Gavin MacFadyen, visiting professor of journalism at London’s City University and a friend and supporter of Mr Assange, said that the critics constituted “four or five people out of around 500″ who have worked with WikiLeaks. (ANI)
- Assange getting 'lion's share' of about $86,000 a year as salary from Wikileaks - Dec 25, 2010
- WikiLeaks' Assange paid 66,000 euros in 2010 - Dec 24, 2010
- Now, mini WikiLeaks on web, US cautions Switzerland over Assange asylum offer - Dec 06, 2010
- Wikileaks losing 600,000 francs every week since first publication - Jan 11, 2011
- WikiLeaks suspends publishing - Oct 25, 2011
- PayPal suspends donations to WikiLeaks - Dec 05, 2010
- PayPal says it blocked WikiLeaks after U.S. government request - Dec 08, 2010
- 'Assange bringing WikiLeaks down' - Dec 23, 2010
- WikiLeaks founder Assange fights calls to step down - Sep 09, 2010
- Assange gets bail, says WikiLeaks to continue its work (Lead) - Jan 11, 2011
- US aiming to prosecute WikiLeaks founder Assange over diplomatic cables release - Dec 07, 2010
- Hackers target credit card firms in revenge for Assange - Dec 09, 2010
- WikiLeaks pays US soldier $15,100 legal fee for leaks - Jan 14, 2011
- Assange says his convictions have not been shaken by his incarceration - Dec 14, 2010
- Angry pro-Wikileaks hackers may target British websites - Dec 14, 2010
Tags: activist, computer hacker, eight months, holland, journalism, kassel germany, leaks, main source, million dollars, money laundering regulations, regulators, sums of money, telegraph, tens of thousands, thousands of dollars, three months, transparency, visiting professor, whistle, wikileaks